Business Standard

India’s GDP grows 4.1% in Q4, 8.7% in 2021-22

Manufactur­ing sector contracts in March quarter due to supply disruption­s

- ASIT RANJAN MISHRA New Delhi, 31 May

India’s economy grew 4.1 per cent yearon-year in the January-march period of 2021-22 (Q4 FY22), even as the rate of growth slowed sequential­ly for a third straight quarter with the Omicron wave-induced restrictio­ns and high commodity prices weighing on economic activities.

The National Statistics Office on Tuesday pared down the overall growth estimate for FY22 to 8.7 per cent from the 8.8 per cent projected in February. In FY22, all sectors except trade, hotels and communicat­ion services were above the pre-pandemic levels of FY20.

Growth in private final consumptio­n expenditur­e, or private spending, decelerate­d sequential­ly in Q4 to 1.8 per cent, proving to be the weakest link. Government spending, however, picked up to grow at 4.8 per cent, supporting overall growth. Gross fixed capital formation, which represents investment demand in the economy, slowed to 5.1 per cent.

On the supply side, the manufactur­ing sector contracted 0.2 per cent in the March quarter due to supply chain disruption­s, while agricultur­e growth (4.1 per cent) remained robust despite the third advance estimates projecting a decline in wheat output due to the ongoing heat wave.

The labour-intensive constructi­on sector returned to positive growth in the March quarter (2 per cent) due to the government’s capex push and a pick-up in the real estate sector before the policy rate hike by the central bank. Growth in services output slowed to 5.5 per cent as a result of a sluggish performanc­e of trade, hotel transport, communicat­ions services (5.3 per cent), signalling the pent-up demand did not quite translate to higher growth.

Gross value added (GVA) at basic prices grew at 3.9 per cent in the fourth quarter and 8.1 per cent in FY22.

Aditi Nayar, chief economist at ICRA Ratings, said the contractio­n in the manufactur­ing sector, which struggled with supply bottleneck­s and high input prices in the last quarter of FY22, was a cause for concern. “The other concerning aspect is the reduction in the consumptio­n-to-gdp ratio in the fourth quarter of FY22, even as the investment-to-gdp ratio has bounced back,” she added.

Reacting to the latest GDP data, Chief Economic Adviser V Anantha Nageswaran said recent high-frequency indicators showed strengthen­ing domestic demand conditions and greater capacity utilisatio­n in the manufactur­ing sector, signalling a pick-up in economic activity. “The projection of a normal monsoon and prospects of earning (higher) income will likely increase area under Kharif 2022-23 crops. Rural demand (is) expected to revive in the coming months on the back of higher agricultur­al output, better pricing, expectatio­ns of a better monsoon and the government’s supportive policy for rural India,” he added.

Nayar said that going forward, India’s economy would continue to feel the heat from global volatility and uncertaint­ies. “Factors like the Russia-ukraine war, high global commodity prices, pace of monetary tightening by central banks globally, and overall global economic slowdown will have a bearing on India’s economy. Consumptio­n spending could see an improvemen­t as the employment situation in the economy improves. However, high food and fuel inflation will be a dampener for discretion­ary spending,” she added. Nominal GDP is estimated to grow 19.5 per cent in FY22 to ~236.4 trillion. The growth embedded in nominal GDP assumed by the Union Budget for FY23 now turns out to be only 9 per cent instead of 11 per cent assumed earlier.

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